Everything seems smooth. Youâre at the airport, boarding pass ready, suitcase packed, confident youâll make your flight on time⌠until one small detail changes everything.
Itâs not something illegal.
Itâs not obvious.
Itâs something you carry all the time.
And thatâs when you realize the truth:
In 2026, travel isnât ruined by big mistakesâ
itâs ruined by tiny details.
Airport rules across the U.S., Mexico, and Latin America are now stricter, faster, and far less forgiving.
Here are the most common issues delaying passengersâand how to avoid them.
1. The toothpaste and liquids mistake
It sounds minor, but itâs one of the biggest causes of delays.
It doesnât matter if the container looks smallâ
what matters is the size printed on the label.
Many âtravel-sizedâ items still exceed the allowed limit, and security checks go strictly by numbersânot appearances.
How to avoid it:
- Always check the exact volume (ml or oz
- Use approved travel containers
- Keep medical liquids separate and clearly labeled
2. Carry-on size surprises
You pass security easily⌠but at the gate, they ask you to check your bag size.
Thatâs where things go wrong.
Wheels stick out.
Handles donât fit.
The bag is overpacked.
Result: it gets checked inâand you pay extra.
How to avoid it:
- Measure your bag including wheels and handles
- Donât overfill your suitcase
- Check your airlineâs exact size rules
- Keep essentials in your personal item
3. Documents that stop you cold
A small detail can prevent you from boarding:
Expired or nearly expired passport
Damaged documents
Name mismatch on your ticket
How to avoid it:
- Double-check everything before your trip
- Make sure names match exactly
- Carry digital backups of important documents
4. Problems with batteries and devices
Security doesnât take items randomlyâthey remove what they canât quickly verify.
Loose batteries, unclear capacity labels, or damaged devices raise red flags.
How to avoid it:
- Keep batteries in your carry-on, not checked luggage
- Make sure capacity labels are visible
- Use protective cases
- Avoid unbranded or unclear electronics